Google Wallet Rings Up Visa, Amex, Discover as Partners

Google Wallet makes its summer deadline, launching in New York and San Francisco to let consumers pay by phone from Sprint's Samsung Nexus S 4G handsets.

Google (NASDAQ:GOOG) met its self-imposed goal to launch its mobile payment
service this summer, as Google Wallet rolled out Sept. 19 to allow consumers in
New York and San Francisco pay retailers with their mobile phones.

The launch came with a surprise bonus: Visa, American Express and Discover
have joined Citi and MasterCard as credit card partners.

Unveiled in Google's New York
office in May, Google Wallet includes a mobile application that communicates
with smartphones equipped with near field communications (NFC), a short
distance wireless technology.
Sprint Nexus S 4G phone owners will receive access to the Wallet through an
over-the-air update. Once they receive the app, Nexus S 4G owners can tap their
phones against an NFC-enabled cash register to pay for goods at some 20
retailers and restaurants.
Google Wallet will initially support Citi MasterCard and a Google Prepaid
Card, which can be funded with existing plastic credit cards and used at
any of the 300,000 stores worldwide that accept MasterCard PayPass. Google is
offering a $10 bonus credit to users who set up the Google Prepaid Card in
Google Wallet before the end of 2011.
Visa, American Express and Discover have also pledged to enable their cards
to support the service in the future, Osama Bedier, Google's vice president of payments, said in a blog
post.
Visa also said Google has licensed for payWave contactless payment software,
the card provider's answer to MasterCard PayPass, at hundreds of thousands of
cash registers all over the world. This deal will enable Visa account holders
to make purchases using Wallet.
"Our goal is to make it possible for you to add all of your payment
cards to Google Wallet, so you can say goodbye to even the biggest traditional
wallets," Bedier said, adding the Wallet would be available on more phones
in the future.
Read early reviews of Wallet from The
Verge and GigaOm blogs.
Wallet stands at the vanguard of a number of emerging mobile payments
solutions, including those from Square and PayPal, as well as Isis, the mobile
payment triumvirate formed by AT&T, Verizon Wireless and T-Mobile. Isis won't launch until 2012, but it will do so with support
from all of the major credit card providers.
One of the challenges Wallet and all of its erstwhile rivals will have is
selling the consumer on the notion of mobile payments via smartphones. There is
no proof that consumers will embrace such technology after shoppers have spent
the last several decades using plastic cards they simply swipe at checkout.
Moreover, Google developed its latest Android 2.3 "Gingerbread"
operating system with NFC technology, the Nexus S 4G is currently the only
equipped with a special NFC chip to securely store users' credit card data. And
Google only has about 20 retail partners, including Macy's, CVS
and American Eagle, where users can use Wallet.
Google believes it has the advantage of incentive with Google Offers, the company's Groupon clone service that
entices consumers with discounts of 50 percent off or more for goods and
services. Offers is live in three dozen cities around the country, including in
San Francisco and New
York, where Wallet is now available.
Deal aggregator Yipit claims Offers has suffered declines versus rivals
Groupon and LivingSocial of late. However, a Google spokesperson said the
company is pleased with Offers so far.